ALBANY District Attor ney Paul Clyne said yesterday he needs “a few more weeks” to decide if he’s going to indict state lawmakers for stealing official travel reimbursements funds.

Clyne told The Post he’s still waiting to receive potentially critical documents from Florida-based Correctional Services Corp., the prison-services firm that provided free, roundtrip limo trips to and from the Capitol for lawmakers able to help the company win state contracts.

Investigators believe several of those lawmakers, including Brooklyn Democratic Assemblyman Roger Green, then billed the state for thousands of dollars in travel reimbursements, even though they incurred no actual costs.

The probe was triggered by former Bronx Democratic Assemblywoman Gloria Davis’ guilty plea in January to taking bribes. She also admitted accepting free CSC-provided transportation in exchange for helping the company obtain contracts.

“I would say we’ll have the decision within weeks. There are certain records that we’re waiting for from the company,” Clyne told The Post.

He said he would be able to reach a decision on indictments within 30 days.

Clyne and the state Board of Elections, meanwhile, are also seeking to determine if several lawmakers, including Green, received illegal “in-kind” campaign contributions from CSC.

CSC Vice President Jack Brown told the State Lobbying Commission earlier this year that his company regularly provided undisclosed campaign workers and transportation to Green and Brooklyn Assemblyman Daryl Towns during the 2000 campaign season.

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Assembly Corporations Committee Chairman Richard Brodsky, whose investigations have exposed a series of alleged improprieties in state authorities controlled by Gov. Pataki, is hinting there’s a lot more to come.

“There’s a great deal more there that I know than there is that I can prove at this time,” said Brodsky (D-Westchester,) whose committee revealed the $500,000 “telephone call” made by former Sen. Al D’Amato to the MTA and the $600,000-plus “salary” paid a close Pataki friend by the Long Island Power Authority.

Brodsky, who made his provocative comment late last week at a grim, two-day Citizens Budget Commission forum on the decline of state government, said he’s got “several investigations” currently under way and he expects new details involving at least one of them to become public within weeks.